• J Am Acad Nurse Prac · Jun 2005

    Review Case Reports

    From mechanisms to management: translating the neuropathic pain consensus recommendations into clinical practice.

    • Eric Chevlen, Pamela Stitzlein Davis, and Michelle Rhiner.
    • Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, Rootstown, USA.
    • J Am Acad Nurse Prac. 2005 Jun 1; 17 (6 Suppl): 3-17; quiz 18.

    AbstractChronic neuropathic pain poses a treatment challenge, and is associated with significant psychologic distress, physical disability, and impaired functioning, which impact the activities of daily living. Efforts to provide relief are often inadequate and/or require polypharmacy. This has spurred interest among researchers and clinicians alike to develop early, intensive treatments that target the molecular and cellular mechanisms involved in pain transduction, transmission, and modulation, or ideally, that prevent neuropathic pain from occurring in the first place. Currently, researchers are attempting to capitalize on our understanding of neuropathic pain pathophysiology to develop drugs that interrupt distinct activities involved in its perpetuation. In this regard, several potential agents (eg, NMDA and AMPA/kainate antagonists) are in phase 2 and 3 clinical trials. In the interim, evolving data and evidence-based neuropathic treatment recommendations provide guidance for selecting first- and second-line medications that alone or in combination offer acceptable neuropathic pain control and allow clinicians to bridge the gap between current knowledge and its application in the clinical setting. Hopefully, as basic and clinical science progresses, further treatment advances and management tools will be found to improve the care of patients who live with neuropathic pain.

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